I am environmental engineer, i work in a really cool job. I am 22 and i am loving every minute of it. I wake up in the morning and leave to work like 10.00AM ....................and then I'm back at six........
Every employee has to work for 40 hrs a week, 150 hrs per month. So if you work more, you don't get extra salary but you get rewards in the form of travel trips, vouchers, company cars and...........etc...
so if you see, I have plenty of time and even when i go to work, its like going for field trips as i get to visit forests, reserves,, basically things concerning the environment and if you show lots of potential in your work, they send you abroad. I am like only 24 and have been working for 2 yrs only as a environmental engineer... I earn $11530 per month and have been to many parts of the world..
the only tiring thing in this job is that you have to travel a lot, and sometimes the sites you visit are pretty un-pristine and dirty..(I mean.cmn its the environment)
It all depends on the job you take. Production engineers, like those that work for chevron will work 40 hours a week like most jobs. They will report to the office like in new Orleans or Houston. Now, on a rig it is a totally different story. They will pull atleast 12 hours a day. Most over a hundred a week. Which engineers who work offshore or on a rig get paid by the hour or by the day. So, you are making the most for the time you sink in. I'm a petroleum engineering student at LSU. A few of our professor's have told us they spent 2 days up non stop sometimes. It all depends what is going on.
2.824 billion dollars a week
construction engineers gets paid about $5000 to $6000 a week
Being a salaried employee a Mechanical Engineer only gets paid for 8 hours of work a day, no matter how many hours he actually works. While in most cases he does only work 8 hours in a day, when schedules are slipping or other problems crop up he will be expected to work as much as necessary to resolve it as soon as possible. I have known a few engineers that worked more than 20 hours a day for a few weeks to resolve a particularly difficult issue.
In my opinion, no stuent or any other worker should be expected to work for more than 7 1/2 hours a day, five days a week over 48 weeks a year. That would be 1500 hours a year, or about 50 hours a week in a three-term, ten week term year. For a school student, that is a 40 hour week over a 48 week year. For young people under 16, clearly the study time should be reduced.
around 50, 60, or 70 hours a week.
That completely depends on the company and the project. I am a telecom engineer currently working 10 hours a day, 7 days a week.
There are 168 hours are in a week.
There are 196 hours in one week
168 hours in a week
It varies, there are no set hours for an interior decorator
There are 168 hours in 7 days (one week).
There are 168 hours in 1 week.
50-60 hours a week
168 hours per week
168 hours in 1 week
Most Civil Enginners work between 50 and 60 hours per week any engineer can even work 5 hours a day and still get payed either $5,000 to $10,000 dollars anyway